A small, fast, pure JavaScript type-stripper that uses the official TypeScript parser.
TypeScript goes in:
class C<T> extends Array<T> implements I {
// ^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
private field!: string;
// ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^
method<T>(this: T, a?: string): void {
// ^^^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^
}
}
JavaScript + space comes out:
class C extends Array {
// ^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
field ;
// ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^
method ( a ) {
// ^^^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^
}
}
Try it out in the playground.
The benefits of this library are:
- It is fast
- See
./perf
folder for a micro-benchmark- Only 4 times slower than a native multi-threaded transformer
- Fastest compared to non-native (JavaScript or Wasm)
- No new JavaScript code is generated; instead, it re-uses slices of the existing source string
- This is particularly true if your program is already generating the TypeScript
SourceFile
object, because it can be reused -- and producing the AST is the most time consuming part.
- See
- 100% JavaScript runtime
- No Wasm
- No native-addons
- No child process
- It is small
- Around 700 lines of code and one dependency (
TypeScript
) - By doing so little, the code should be relatively easy to maintain
- Around 700 lines of code and one dependency (
- Delegates the parsing to the official TypeScript parser
- No need for additional SourceMap processing; see "where are my SourceMaps?"
ℹ️ Not all TypeScript syntax is supported (see unsupported syntax). There is also no down-leveling; the JavaScript is preserved as is.
- Installing
- API
- Node.js Loader
- SourceMaps
- Implementation details
- Unsupported Syntax
- tsconfig.json
- TSX/JSX
- ESM Output
- Contributions
- License
- Code of Conduct
- Security Vulnerability Reporting
npm install ts-blank-space
export default function tsBlankSpace(ts: string, onError?: (node) => void): string;
import tsBlankSpace from "ts-blank-space";
console.log(tsBlankSpace(`let x: string;`));
// "let x ;"
export function blankSourceFile(ts: typescript.SourceFile, onError?: (node) => void): string;
import ts from "typescript";
import { blankSourceFile } from "ts-blank-space";
const ast = ts.createSourceFile(...);
console.log(blankSourceFile(ast));
ts-blank-space
exposes the required Node.js module loader hooks to use ts-blank-space
to pre-process *.ts
that are imported before they are evaluated.
# Install (one time):
$ npm install --save-dev ts-blank-space
# Example usage (Node.js >= v18.20):
$ node --import ts-blank-space/register ./path/to/your/file.ts
In addition to loading *.ts
files, an import resolver is also registered which catches failed *.js
imports and re-attempts the import replacing the extension with .ts
. This allows import paths to choose either .ts
or .js
depending on which other factors the project may need to take into account such as bundling and package distribution.
ℹ️ The loader assumes that all .ts
files are ESM.
Because all the JavaScript in the output is located at the same line, column, and byte-offset as the original source, no mapping information is lost during the transform.
There are two cases, described here, where it does more than replace the TypeScript syntax with blank space.
To guard against ASI issues in the output, ts-blank-space
will add ;
to the end of type-only statements, and when removing a leading type annotation could introduce an ASI hazard.
statementWithNoSemiColon
type Erased = true
("not calling above statement")
becomes:
statementWithNoSemiColon
;
("not calling above statement");
class C {
field = 1/* no ; */
public ["computed field not accessing above"] = 2
}
becomes:
class C {
field = 1/* no ; */
; ["computed field not accessing above"] = 2
}
If the type annotations around an arrow function's parameters introduce a new line then only replacing them with blank space can be incorrect. Therefore, in addition to removing the type annotation, the (
or )
surrounding the function parameters may also be moved.
let f = (a: string, b: string): Array<
string
> => [a, b];
becomes:
let f = (a , b
) => [a, b];
let f = async <
T
>(v: T) => {};
becomes:
let f = async (
v ) => {};
Some parts of TypeScript are not supported because they can't be erased in place due to having runtime semantics. See unsupported_syntax.md.
When unsupported syntax is encountered, ts-blank-space
will call the optional onError
callback and continue. Examples can be seen in errors.test.ts
.
{
// Because JS syntax is emitted as-is
"target": "esnext",
// Because class fields are preserved as written which corresponds
// to 'define' semantics in the ECMAScript specification
"useDefineForClassFields": true,
// Because imports and exports are preserved as written, only removing the
// parts which are explicitly annotated with the `type` keyword
"verbatimModuleSyntax": true,
}
.tsx
input will generate .jsx
output. JSX parts are not transformed, but instead preserved in the output.
By default, ts-blank-space
will parse the file assuming .ts
. If the original file contains JSX syntax, then the parsing should be done manually. There is a TSX example in valid.test.ts
.
import ts from "typescript";
import { blankSourceFile } from "ts-blank-space";
...
const tsxSource = ts.createSourceFile("input.tsx", tsxInput, ts.ScriptTarget.ESNext, false, ts.ScriptKind.TSX);
const jsxOutput = blankSourceFile(tsxSource, onError);
TypeScript may add an export {};
if all import
s and export
s were removed (because they were import/export type
).
Because ts-blank-space
only removes code, this is not performed. To force the output to always have an ESM syntactic marker, you can manually append "export {};"
;
- Webpack/Rspack: ts-blank-loader
We ❤️ contributions.
Have you had a good experience with this project? Why not share some love and contribute code, or just let us know about any issues you had with it?
We welcome issue reports here; be sure to choose the proper issue template for your issue, so that we can be sure you're providing the necessary information.
Before sending a Pull Request, please make sure you read our Contribution Guidelines.
Please read the LICENSE file.
This project has adopted a Code of Conduct. If you have any concerns about the Code, or behavior which you have experienced in the project, please contact us at [email protected].
Please refer to the project Security Policy.